2016 AIChE Annual Meeting
(69e) Engineering Artificial Metabolons for Substrate Channeling
Authors
Mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase (mMDH) and citrate synthase (CS) from the TCA cycle have been well-studied for metabolon formation and substrate channeling of the intermediate oxaloacetate (OAA). We examined the structure of a recombinant mMDH/CS metabolon and located a patch of positively charged amino acids connecting the enzyme active sites along which the negatively charged OAA could travel by bounded diffusion. By mutating a single amino acid along this channel, we inhibited metabolon formation and substrate channeling, decreasing the probability of channeling from 0.99 to 0.23.1 Next, we use several strategies in order to assemble multi-enzyme complexes to mimic nature. These strategies include protein scaffolds to which enzymes are attached by covalent bonds, DNA scaffolds in combination with DNA-binding proteins, and peptide staples genetically fused to one enzyme with binding affinity for the next enzyme. In this work, we compare the substrate channeling in these engineered metabolons to free enzymes and natural recombinant metabolon complexes.
1. Bulutoglu, B.; Garcia, K. E.; Wu, F.; Minteer, S. D.; Banta, S., Direct evidence for metabolon formation and subatrate channeling in recombinant TCA cycle enzymes, submitted.